Archives

The Context of White Supremacy welcomes Mrs. Patsy Spears. Mrs. Spears was born in Trinidad and migrated to England in 1969. She trained as a nurse and midwife in the early 1970′s. She has more than 30 years experience assisting pregnant mothers as a midwife, and has been a diligent Practice Nurse since 2004. She is listed as the chair of the Ethnic Minority Association Broxbourne. We look forward to hearing her thoughts on how Racism operates in the United Kingdom. We are eager to hear how she has been (mis)treated as a black immigrant as well as the prospect of Racism ending in the next twenty years. We’re eager to hear Mrs. Spears’ views on the 20 year saga surrounding the Racist slaughter of Stephen Lawrence as well as UKIP‘s call to restrict immigration to preserve Britain for Britons (Whites).

The C.O.W.S. Radio Program is specifically engineered for black & non-white listeners – Victims of White Supremacy. The purpose of this program is to provide Victims of White Supremacy with constructive information and suggestions on how to counter Racist Woman & Racist Man.

Joshua Cryer admitted using the social networking site to bombard Collymore with abuse in an attempt to “snare a celebrity”, a district judge at Newcastle Magistrates’ Court heard.

He told police he hoped to gain a reaction from Collymore, who campaigns against racism and is a supporter of the Depression Alliance charity.

Cryer claimed his account had been hacked.

He later admitted a charge under section 127 of the Communications Act of sending grossly offensive messages and was ordered to complete a two-year community order with 240 hours unpaid work, and to pay £150 costs to the court.

Barnes says that there is an inherent racism at large which needs to be addressed.

He says that football is only a slice of society and that black integration into high-profile jobs in politics or journalism is still at a low level, so it’s natural that we notice a person’s skin colour in those circumstances, even today.

“Football can pass laws to stop racist chants. You can’t stop people being racist. Only through education will people understand why it’s wrong to be racist.

“The only way to tackle racism is to treat the cause.”

He says that when we point the finger at football, we absolve the rest of society from responsibility.

Barnes acknowledges that “overt racism has been tackled, but that doesn’t mean that racism has gone away,” and that hundreds of years of perceptions cannot be changed overnight.

“It’s easy to say we don’t see people’s colour, but we do. To say we don’t see colour is stupid, and it absolves us of the way we actually do feel, because we do see colour.

“People are afraid to say it affects them more to see white people dying than black people. Those differences are based on what we’ve been told for the last 200 years,” he says.

The over-40s are now the only age group whose numbers going into drug treatment are still going up and they now account for almost a third of the 197,000 adults in the programme in England and Wales.

Paul Hayes, the NTA chief executive, said they were mainly people in their 40s and 50s who had been using heroin and crack since the epidemics of the 1980s and 1990s and whose health was now seriously deteriorating. This has been reflected in a sharp rise in drug-related deaths among over-40s over the past decade from 504 in 2001 to 802 last year.

The annual drug treatment figures show that the number of young adults going into treatment for heroin fell last year from 5,532 to 4,268, a drop of 23%, and nearly two-thirds lower than the 11,306 who entered treatment in 2005/06. This compares with 16,187 over-40s who went into treatment last year.

Heroin remains the biggest problem for those in treatment with 96,343 out of 197,110 adults in the programme getting help for heroin dependency and a further 63,199 getting help for heroin and crack. A total of 15,194 are getting help for cannabis and 9,640 for powder cocaine.

Hayes also said the figures showed that record numbers of drug addicts in England were recovering from addiction with nearly 30,000 successfully completing their treatment in 2011/2012. He added that nearly one-third of users in the past seven years had successfully completed their treatment and did not return.

Hayes said one factor behind the decline in young adults going into treatment was the existence of a “savvier generation of young people who seem to know what heroin and crack is going to do to you”.

The NTA chief executive said: “The original pool of heroin and crack addicts is shrinking and because fewer people are using heroin or crack, it’s not being topped up.

“Less positively, there’s an increasing challenge from older drug users, many of whom are still in the system and others who began using in the 1980s and 1990s are now beginning to access treatment as their health deteriorates.”

He said there were risks ahead, especially in an age of austerity: “No one could have predicted in the 1980s that one of the consequences of the recession would have been mass heroin use. It came from nowhere.

“Whilst this recession has not produced the same levels of youth unemployment that the 1980s did, youth unemployment, hopelessness among young people, provides fertile territory for the next drugs threat to take hold.”

He also warned that the current levels of investment in drug treatment could not be guaranteed in the current financial climate. The NTA is being abolished next year and will become part of the new public health service, and treatment budgets are being transferred to “squeezed” local authorities. This could put support services for drug users in long-term recovery at risk.

Martin Barnes of the drugs information charity Drugscope said the decline in heroin use and dependency, especially among young people, was a sign that drug treatment had been turning the tide of the heroin epidemic of the 1980s.

“Despite encouraging trends in declining drug use, drug and alcohol dependency continue to blight the lives of many, with harms and costs for individuals, families and communities,” he said.

This is a movie called “Burn!” came out in 1969. I was one years old. Anyway, this movie stars suspected “White” person, Marlon Brando. He said in an interview with Larry King that it was the best movie he ever made.

The movie is about a “British” agent / Racist Suspect named William Walker (played by Marlon Brando) who in what appears to be the early 1830’s arrives in Queimada, a “Portuguese” colony in the Antilles, to cause a slave revolt, take over the island, then make a deal to increase profits in the sugar trade with England. He searches for and finds a Victim Of Racism who possesses the potential to lead that revolt in a luggage carrier named of José Dolores. They build an army of Victims who kicked the “Portuguese” Racist Suspects asses right off the island. A new government is formed with the wealthy Racist Suspects on the island who were tired of the policies set by the “Portuguese”. That government becomes a supporter of the “British” government. Ten years later, William (now a mercenary) is hired by the “British” Antilles Royal Sugar Company (which wants to protect its investments in the sugar plantations of the island) as a military adviser to the Queimada government to capture José Dolores and his army of rebels, because he has started a revolt against his deceivers which is damaging their financial interests.http://www.counter-racismnow.com/2012/06/you-want-to-somewhat-know-how-white.html